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Query: UMLS:C0029713 (
immaturity
)
4,335
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Adult and neonatal immunocompetent cells exhibit important functional distinctions, including differences in cytokine production and susceptibility to tolerance induction. We have investigated the molecular features that characterize the immune response of cord blood-derived T lymphocytes compared with that of adult T lymphocytes. Our findings demonstrate that phospholipase C (PLC) isozymes, which play a pivotal role in the control of protein kinase C activation and Ca2+ mobilization, are differently expressed in cord and adult T lymphocytes. PLCbeta1 and delta1 are expressed at higher levels in cord T cells, while PLCbeta2 and gamma1 expression is higher in adult T lymphocytes. PLCdelta2 and
gamma2
appear to be equally expressed in both cell types. In addition, a functional defect in PLC activation via CD3 ligation or pervanadate treatment, stimuli that activate tyrosine kinases, was observed in cord blood T cells, whereas treatment with aluminum tetrafluoride (AlF4-), a G protein activator, demonstrated a similar degree of PLC activation in cord and adult T cells. The impaired PLC activation of cord blood-derived T cells was associated with a a very low expression of the Src kinase, Lck, along with a reduced level of ZAP70. No mitogenic response to CD3 ligation was observed in cord T cells. However, no signaling defect was apparent downstream of PLC activation, as demonstrated by the mitogenic response of cord T cells to the pharmacologic activation of protein kinase C and Ca2+ by treatment with PMA and ionomycin. Thus, neonatal cord blood-derived T cells show a signaling
immaturity
associated with inadequate PLCgamma activation and decreased Lck expression.
...
PMID:Inefficient phospholipase C activation and reduced Lck expression characterize the signaling defect of umbilical cord T lymphocytes. 1045 76
Using immunohistochemical methods, we assessed the distribution of all 10 known laminin chains (alpha1-5, beta1-3, gamma1 and
gamma2
) in skeletal muscles from patients with Duchenne, congenital, limb girdle, or Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophies. The alpha2, beta1 and gamma1 chains were abundant in the basal lamina surrounding muscle fibers in normal controls; alpha1, alpha3-alpha5, beta3, and
gamma2
were undetectable; and beta2 was present at a low level. Compared to controls, levels of the alpha5 chain were increased in muscles from many dystrophic patients; levels of beta1 were reduced and/or levels of beta2 were increased in a minority. However, these changes were neither specific for, nor consistent within, diagnostic categories. In contrast, levels of alpha4 were increased in muscles from all patients with alpha2 laminin (merosin)-deficient congenital muscular dystrophy. Loss of alpha2 laminin in congenital dystrophy is disease-specific but some other changes in laminin isoform expression in dystrophic muscles could be secondary consequences of myopathy, denervation, regeneration or
immaturity
. To distinguish among these possibilities, we compared the laminins of embryonic, denervated, regenerating, and mutant mouse muscles with those in normal adult muscle. Embryonic muscle basal lamina contained alpha4 and alpha5 along with alpha2, and regenerating muscle re-expressed alpha5 but not alpha4. Levels of alpha5 but not alpha4 were increased in dystrophin (mdx) mutants and in dystrophin/utrophin double mutants (mdx:utrn -/-), models for Duchenne dystrophy. In contrast, laminin alpha4 was upregulated more than alpha5 in muscles of laminin alpha2 mutant mice (dy/dy; a model for alpha2-deficient congenital dystrophy). Based on these results, we hypothesize that the expression of alpha5 in many dystrophies reflects the regenerative process, whereas the selective expression of alpha4 in alpha2-deficient muscle is a specific compensatory response to loss of alpha2.
...
PMID:Distribution of ten laminin chains in dystrophic and regenerating muscles. 1054 49